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All the things that Reggie Bush can do with a football fit perfectly into the West Coast offense being installed by new Dolphins coach Joe Philbin.

You can scratch, however, Reggie’s stated off-season goal of leading the NFL in rushing. Sophistication has come to the Dolphins offense, yanking Bush back out of the helmet-cracking time warp where Tony Sparano had taken him.

“Obviously, we’re not at the game-plan stage yet,” Philbin said Wednesday at mini-camp, “but that wouldn’t be the thing that we’re sitting around on a Monday night worried about, an individual player leading the league in rushing attempts. We’d be concerned about getting first downs, getting into field position and scoring points.”

We don’t really know this coach well yet, but everybody with a television knows Bush and has caught glimpses of him on channels featuring sports, entertainment and music videos.

He’s a star and always has been, from the Heisman Trophy days at USC to the ongoing tabloid tempest of his former relationship with Kim Kardashian to the multiplicity of open-field opportunities that the 2009 New Orleans Saints drew up for him on the way to a Super Bowl championship.

What happened in Miami last season was yet another permutation of Bush’s headliner potential, and perhaps the most satisfying. The flashy third-down specialist showed himself fit for hard duty as a between-the-tackles running back, starting 15 games and for the first time cracking the 1,000-yard rushing barrier.

Empowering, this new roar from Reggie, who had five 100-yard games in 2011. Prior to last season, he had only one in the rest of his career.

Look, though, for Bush to toggle back to his hybrid days now, catching more passes and taking less punishment. He’s proven his toughness, once, and most likely, for all.

“This offense is perfect for guys like me,” said Bush, who averaged 14.4 carries last season but fewer than three receptions per game. “It gives us a chance to use our speed and kind of wear down the defense and have them chase us around all day.

“I think I will be pretty balanced. Hearing them talk, they want to run the ball just as much as they want to throw the ball. Obviously I think my role is going to be a little bit different from last year. I’m going to be split out wide a little bit more, playing more receiver, but for the most part I think we’re still going to run the ball.”

So far the Dolphins are just talking about what they’re going to do this fall. They’re wrapping up a mini-camp Thursday in helmets and shorts. They’re getting acquainted with a digital playbook, and with the presence of HBO’s Hard Knocks film crew prowling the sidelines and the training facility. It’s June, too early to draw conclusions about just about anything, including the notion that Chad Ochocinco will be on the roster for the season’s opening game.

On the short list of certainties, though, is Philbin’s need to get the best out of Bush, who at 27 is rounding into a more complete pro. There is some bonding to do between the coach and his star, and Philbin surely doesn’t come off like the Hollywood type.

Bush missed a voluntary practice in late May. Asked by reporters for an explanation, Philbin said, “I’ll talk about anyone who was here and what they did, but I’m not going to talk about guys who weren’t here.”

Bush, meanwhile, wrote on his Twitter account how he spent that weekend in Las Vegas, and there was an article in theLas Vegas Sun placing him at a Memorial Day party with celebrities such as Rihanna, Usher and Academy Award winner Benicio del Toro.

More recently, Reggie sat ringside for Manny Pacquiao’s shocking loss of the welterweight title to Timothy Bradley, another Vegas happening.

The bright lights always will appeal to Bush. That doesn’t make him a diva, but it does put Philbin on alert for cracks in the kind of foundational leadership structure that is so important to every rookie head coach.

“Well, obviously, time will tell how good of a fit it is, but we like the skills that he has,” Philbin said. “We like his running ability. He has good vision, explosiveness, quickness, and I think he has some elusiveness as well.

“You know, it’s tough to design 20-yard completion passes all the time in the air, so if we can get him the ball in space a little bit, and if we can hand him the ball and get some defenses to spread out so we can get him the football in different ways, I think that will help us.”

Bush would help the Dolphins or any other team, no matter how he’s used. What Philbin foresees for him is a little bit of everything, and a whole lot of touchdowns. Nothing wrong with that, especially if it prolongs the peak of this versatile athlete’s career.